Purpose and main stages of the review process Helka Kekäläinen Vice-President ENQA ENQA training on agency reviews 5 September 2011
Coordination of the review process National level national authorities International level ENQA international quality assurance organisation First review for ENQA membership purposes is to be coordinated by ENQA, not by another body
Purpose of the review To evaluate whether or not an agency meets the ENQA membership criteria, and thereby the ESG applicable irrespective of a nationally or internationally coordinated review Beware! 2 types of reviews: Type A (1 purpose: ENQA membership / EQAR listing) Type B (several purposes) statutory functions ECA Code of Good Practice special context (e.g. bi-national character, NVAO)
Principles of the review The review is an evidence-based process carried out by independent peer experts information provided by the Agency is assumed to be factually correct unless other evidence points to the contrary review is a process of verification of the information provided (mainly by SER) and the exploration of any matters which are omitted from that documentation the level of conformity that is expected is substantial compliance, not rigid adherence
Key features of the review process management of process must be completely independent of the Agency itself all parts of the process must be transparent (easily open to examination by the ENQA Board) the report must be sufficiently detailed to provide satisfactory assurance of the robustness of the review the report must provide sufficient, verified information which clearly shows that the criteria have been met
Stage 1: before the site visit
Stage 1: before the site visit Composition of the panel selection process must be carried out by the Coordinating body (and not by the Agency being reviewed) When a review is carried out for ENQA membership purposes, panel composition and terms of reference need to be approved by the ENQA Board non-conflict-of-interest agreements Panel normally includes one or two quality assurance experts from outside the national system being reviewed representatives of HEIs students stakeholders (for example, an employer)
Stage 1: before the site visit Transparency ENQA should be kept informed of progress throughout the review to plan its workload to help ensure that the outcomes of the review process meet the requirements of the ENQA Board terms of reference and protocol for the review drafted well before the process starts clearly identify whether type A or type B review clearly state an outline of how the review is going to run number of reviewers, administrative arrangements, approximate timings, language issues and arrangements for translation if necessary, etc.
Stage 1: before the site visit The self-evaluation report (SER) opportunity to reflect on how an agency measures up to the ENQA membership criteria/esg basic source of information for the panel clear information, full, frank and analytical its contents can be corroborated by documentary and/or oral evidence agency may attach as annexes the most crucial documentation (preferably not more than 15 to 20 annexes) it thinks may help support its analysis The panel and/or the ENQA Board are also entitled to request an agency for more documentation at any stage of evaluation
Stage 2: the site visit
Stage 2: the site visit Meetings and interviews with Agency s staff and stakeholders to: - Explore the Agency s performance - Gather and evaluate additional information onsite - Formulate the Panel s preliminary findings and communicate these to the Agency - Produce a material for the draft report Regular panel meetings Final debriefing meeting with the agency (optional) It is essential that the process and the panel s time are managed efficiently and effectively
Stage 2: Site visit normally conducted in English if interpreters are needed by the Agency the Panel should be informed at least one month prior to the visit approval of the interpreters by the panel (must be external to the Agency s operations) agency will bear the cost of interpretation use of interpretation may lengthen the duration of the interviews may also lead to small differences in understanding of detail
Stage 3: after the site visit, writing the report
After the site visit The Agency should not submit new information to the panel after the site visit all relevant information should be provided to the Review panel only before or during the site visit after the site visit, only factual comments on the review report are possible
Stage 3: writing the final report Outline report structure cf. chapter 3.6.1, ENQA Review Guidelines document, p. 13f. Final report should not exceed 40 pages in length Form of the report is likely to depend on the type of review that has been carried out 1. Executive summary 2. Introduction 3. Findings ENQA membership criteria 1 to 8 (ESG 3.1-3.8) have to be fully covered 4+ Any sections relating to additional Terms of Reference of the review 5. Conclusion 6. Annexes
Stage 3: writing the final report Outline report structure The findings section is crucial! The report has to reveal both evidence for and reasoning behind Panel s conclusions: Description of evidence, analysis, conclusion Each membership criterion/esg standard should be discussed separately Under each criterion, the report should include: Evidence: a short description of the evidence gathered Analysis: a consideration of how far the Agency does (or does not) meet the criterion Conclusion: (judgement on compliance): in the opinion of the Panel, how compliant is the Agency with the criterion? Recommendation (if any)
Stage 3: writing up findings: covering ESG II, III Membership criteria contain additional parts to the ESG (cf. p 25 Review- Guidelines document)!
Stage 3: writing the report - Conclusions The ENQA Board will have to make a yes/no decision based on the review. Therefore, the conclusions have to be clear! Conclusions: The agency is fully compliant substantially compliant partially compliant non-compliant with the membership criterion. Panel may comment on overall compliance with membership criteria if it wishes Transparent motivation of conclusions is of utmost importance in order to facilitate consistent Board decisions.
Stage 4: decision making by the ENQA Board The review report analysis and Board decision are based on three principles: Process: review was conducted to the required level of independence, integrity and robustness Content: the review report provide sufficient, verified evidence that the agency meets the ENQA membership criteria and thereby ESG Discrepancies: there is no discrepancy between the panel s conclusions and the evidence brought forward in its report
Stage 4: decision making by the ENQA Board - judgement on compliance ENQA Board is not requesting judgement of the panel on the granting or (re)confirmation of Full Membership Board reserves the right to deviate from the opinion of the Panel if the review process was not carried out properly and independently if the evidence in the report was not supporting the judgements compliance with criteria/esg can be adequately judged on substantial, but not necessarily exhaustive, evidence any areas of total non-compliance are unacceptable some element of compliance would be necessary against all criteria in order to provide an overall judgement based on sufficient compliance
Stage 4: decision making by the ENQA Board The conclusion and recommendation will fall into one of these five categories: 1. Full Membership granted / reconfirmed 2. Request further information in relation to the findings 3. Request further information in relation to the evidence of the review process 4. Full membership is not granted / reconfirmed agency is given two years to conform to criteria agency is loosing membership applicant is granted Candidate membership 5. Review is rejected as unacceptable agency can reapply within limited period agency is not granted membership
Thank you for your attention!